Archive for April, 2010

Why Crime Fiction?


2010
04.30

L'Herault, Agde, taken during my stay last year - I was very sad to leave - see left under Inspiration- for my poem

Last year, during two hot months in France I wrote the first draft of my new (now completed) novel about a Private Investigator.

Until then I had not anticipated writing crime fiction and there are times still when I find myself surprised by this turn of events in my writing life. Times when I ask myself – why crime fiction?

I think this P.D. James quote goes a long way to answering my question – she says ‘I learned a lot from Dorothy Sayers, I think. I learned that it’s important to write well. She was a good writer. I learned…that you can use  a detective story…to say something true, or something you really believe in – and to illumine contemporary life.’

A number of crime writers I admire, Henning Mankell for one, have said something similar: that moving into crime fiction was the means for them of exploring  social issues and moral dilemmas.

Ian Rankin, defender of the genre says ‘…the best crime fiction today is actually talking to us about the same things big literary novels are talking about. They are talking about moral questions, taking ordinary people and putting them in extraordinary situations, and saying to the reader, “How would you cope in this situation?” Or saying, “How would you feel about living in a world in which this these crimes are allowed to happen?” I don’t see a distinction between the two. I think some of the best crime fiction is literature. And some of the best literature is crime fiction.’

I’m inclined to agree – after all a good novel is a good novel is a ….and for me, crime fiction, is most definitely the  place in which I can explore the darker aspects of  the world I live in, including the lives of many of the women I worked with in prison, while at the same time doing what I enjoy most – writing.

And writing my crime novel was probably the most fun I’ve had in my writing life to date!

Looking forward very much to 11.00 am Sunday and P.D. James interviewed by Val McDermid at the Hexham Book festival (now sold out)

The Magician… meeting David Almond


2010
04.25

A week or so ago I wrote – Being with other writers is sometimes the best medicine for self doubt and for me it’s always inspirational - I hadn’t reckoned then with the world beyond inspiration – the world of MAGIC !

On Friday I had the privilege of joining Wendy in conversation with her long time colleague and writing friend, the lovely David Almond-  a conversation, part of which was recorded for Wendy’s forthcoming radio series. David (in case you didn’t know) is  a Whitbread prize winner, has a Carnegie medal and recently won the 2010 Hans Christian Andersen medal for children’s literature

I’d met David before, and had once seen him deliver a workshop to a group of women in the prison where I worked. On that day, like the magician he is, he produced a series of objects – a pastry cutter is one I remember- from a cloth bag. He spun stories around each object before encouraging the women to find their own stories. They loved him!

Talking with David on Friday, both on and off air, like the women at the workshop,  I came under his spell. He is of course world famous and yet so very modest, so much one of us. He talked about the times we all experience when the writing isn’t going so well and you feel like giving up. He talked about the other times, the good times, when stories seem to write themselves – when its magical – and hearing him talk I felt a little bit of that magic rubbing off.

He gave us his fascinating take on the writing process, his thinking on the artifical barriers we create between different forms – the novel, a play, opera- barriers which children just don’t recognise. The need to be playful and free in our writing.

Most of all he told us stories and he is a master story teller – so to hear all of this and more tune in to July’s programme of The Writing Game. I promise you, you are in for a wonderful treat and you will be inspired!

The first Writing Game goes out on May 4th 7pm on Bishop FM 105.9  and will be available after this date as a podcast from the radio’s website so no excuses for not listening.

David Almond is currently working on a play for the Durham Mysteries cycle  Noah and the Flood – Noah is a Geordie!

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo – breaking the rules…


2010
04.22

I have just finished reading Steig Larsson’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. In Swedish its original title was Men Who Hate Women – not such a good title – but one that confirms he was a man after my own heart, very much concerned with the problems of violence against women.*  The book is a great read in parts, although interestingly, far from perfect.

The beginning is too slow and too complex, sometimes resulting in readers giving up (as I did on my first attempt) – the family connections and complexities are difficult to follow, too many names, at times too much information, the end like the beginning is too protracted, but for all that the heart of the novel fizzes like a stick of dynamite between the two.

As an aspiring crime writer I wonder what can I learn from this novel? It isn’t a page turner, pace is very slow at the outset and it takes half the novel before financial journalist and free lance private investigator Mikael Blomkvist discovers the first clue to the disappearance of Harriet Vanger, or before his story connects with the second party in this classic duo – Lisbeth Salander.

It isn’t as strong as it might be on atmosphere or place but it is strong on plot, giving a new twist to the old fashioned ‘locked room mystery in island format,’ (Blomkvist’s words)  and making a number of direct references to Larsson’s literary heroines, including; Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers and Val McDermid.

But what really makes the whole thing work are the protagonists, compelling and complex characters, in particular the eponymous heroine – Lisbeth Salander – a damaged and vulnerable individual. We care about her, we want to know what happens to this twenty four year old, anorexic, computer hacker, with a photographic memory, a goth like appearance, multiple piercings, tattoos and an unexplained past… need I say more?

Mikael Blomkvist is equally sympathetically drawn, if less obviously so. He has, one suspects, many of the characteristics of Larsson himself and he suffers the classic failed marriage and doubts about his parenting abilities. I found him very attractive.

And I find the success of this novel very heartening – it just goes to show you can break some of the rules and get away with it – and it doesn’t, or we as writers don’t, have to be perfect!

* I really can’t agree with those who charge Larsson with misogyny. Whist the violence against women depicted in the book is explicit, it is never graphic, although I understand the film is quite different .

‘Stieg Larsson (1954-2004) grew up in the Swedish coastal town of Umea and was a graphic designer before becoming a journalist and leading investigator of far-right political groups. He founded and edited the left-wing magazine Expo, and wrote crime novels in the evenings to relax. He presented his publisher with three novels in 2004 before he died. In 2008, he was the second best-selling author in the world, after Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner. In Britain, Larsson is published by the independent Quercus, whose dedicated staff could be found in the early days handing out copies to bookish strangers in parks’  Iain Hollingshead –The Telegraph.

Feel The Fear and Write…


2010
04.17

Writing Down The Bones, is a book I often turn to get my writing juices flowing!

Sometimes it’s hard to believe in ourselves as writers, but it’s very important that we do. Too often we doubt ourselves, and we rely too heavily on approval from others and ultimately from the world of books and publishing.

Without self belief it’s impossible to keep writing and that’s why we need people like Natalie Goldberg to help foster our faith in ourselves and our love of writing. We need to nurture our fragile egos, learn to say  ‘what the hell’ to everything that gets in the way and know we can write!

Being with other writers is sometimes the best medicine for self doubt and for me it’s always inspirational.

This morning I listened to a fascinating conversation between Wendy Robertson, who was recording for her new radio programme, The Writing Game, and local writers Hilary Smith and Eileen Elgey. They talked about beginnings – about their writing and about writers they admired, as well as bravely and beautifully reading from their work. The programme goes out on Bishop FM in early May – (I will let you know time and date -soon) – it  will be a valuable resource and inspiration for both new and existing writers as well as readers, and will feature interviews with published authors, local writers, writing workshops and regular book reviews and recommendations.

The recording today inspired me to get writing. I’ve bought  a new notebook so I’m prepared. I have a beginning, something I’m working on but I’m still experimenting and looking for something fresh, maybe completely different. The best way to find it is of course is to just WRITE

But if you feel like I do at the moment, unsure of where to start, unsure of what you want to say then why not try starting with Natalie Goldberg’s Writing Down The Bones - its bursting with ideas and inspiration and her own unique zen outlook. It’s sold millions of copies and being translated into many languages

On writing the book she says , ‘I think I was writing the book to save my creative life. To learn to trust my own mind and have a confidence in my experience.I felt I had something to say and wanted to say it. At first, though, I was afraid… I was afraid people would think it was stupid or idealistic. But I decided I had to put it down and share with the world something that I saw…’

Natalie teaches us not be afraid – possibly the best message there is for a writer!

Spring Cleaning!


2010
04.15

Yes this is Writing Junkie! but with  a new look for the spring, please keep coming back.

Do let me know what you think

Avril

Fun Rules For Writing Fiction


2010
04.06

Talking writing with Jackie and Colleen at RoomToWrite in March - see website www.roomtowrite.co.uk for conference feedback and photos

Get an accountant, abstain from sex and similes, cut, rewrite, then cut and rewrite again – if all else fails, pray. Inspired by Elmore Leonard’s 10 Rules of Writing, we asked authors for their personal do’s and don’ts

…..I came across this recently – Ten Rules For Writing Fiction -  it’s from The Guardian –   a two part article where prominent writers give their ten rules for writing fiction. There are  some great tips to be had, as well as much fun, and I always find that quotes like these, especially written on large sheets of paper in purple felt tip and stuck to my noticeboard, can help keep me inspired and working, or at least make me smile. Hope you enjoy them too.

For sheer simplicity, pragmatism and a certain brand of humility my vote goes to Ian Rankin’s 10 rules

1 Read lots.
2 Write lots.
3 Learn to be self-critical.
4 Learn what criticism to accept.
5 Be persistent.
6 Have a story worth telling.
7 Don’t give up.
8 Know the market.
9 Get lucky.
10 Stay lucky.

Others I really like – Esther Freud Never forget, even your own rules are there to be broken. Possibly the best tip of all!!

David Hare – If nobody will put your play on, put it on yourself.

Rose Tremain – When an idea comes, spend silent time with it…allow yourself also to dream your idea into being.

Jeanette Winterson – Turn up for work… and also – Love what you do.

I think my top tip would be a version of Ian Rankin’s No. 3 – Never stop asking how your writing can be improved – until its finished that is-  and then wait for your agent or publisher to tell you how.

Let me know if any of the tips strike a chord with you or if you have any of your own to share